首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
You are going to read an article about the actress Harriet Walter. For questions 8-15, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which yo
You are going to read an article about the actress Harriet Walter. For questions 8-15, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which yo
admin
2010-12-18
19
问题
You are going to read an article about the actress Harriet Walter. For questions 8-15, choose the answer (A, B, C or D) which you think fits best according to the text.
Acting minus the drama
Harriet Walter has written a fascinating book about her profession.
Benedicte Page reports.
It is not often that all experienced actor with a high public profile will sit down to answer in depth the ordinary theatregoer’s questions: how do you put together a character which isn’t your own?; what is it like to perform the same play night after night’?; or simply, why do you do it? Harriet Walter was prnmpted to write Other People’s Shoes: Thoughts on Acting by a sense that many people’s interest in theatre extended beyond the scope of entertainment chit-chat. "1 was asked very intelligent, probing questions by people who weren’t in the profession, from taxi drivers to dinner-party hosts to people in shopping queues. It made me realise that people have an interest in what we do which goes beyond show- business gossip," she says.
Other People’s’ Shoes avoids insider gossip and, mostly, autobiography: "If events in my life had had a huge direct influence, l would have put them in, but they didn’t," Harriet says, though she does explain how her parents’ divorce was a factor in her careen But the focus of the book is to share—remarkably openly the inside experience of the stage and the rehearsal room, aiming to replace the lalse sense of mystery with a more realistic understanding and respect for the profession.
"There’s a certain double edge to the publicity an actor can get in the newspapers: it gives you attention but, by giving it to you, simultaneously criticises you," Harriet says. "People ask you to talk about yourself and then say, ’Oh, actors are so self-centred.’ And the ’sound- bite’ variety of journalism, which touches on many things but never allows you to go into them in depth, leaves you with a sort of short hand which reinforces prejudices and myths."
Harriet’s career’ began in the 1970s and has included theatre performances with the Royal Shakespeare Company and television and film roles. She writes wittily about the embarrassments of the rehearsal room, as actors try out their half-formed ideas. And she is at pains to demystify the theatre: thc question "How do you do the same play every night?" is answered by a simple comparison with the familiar car journey you take every day, which presents a slightly different challenge each time. "I was trying to get everyone to understand it isn’t line 42 this extraordinary mystery and you’re not visitcd by some spiritual inspiration every night."
Harriet’s own acting style is to build up a character piccu by piece. She says that this process is not widely understood: "There’s no intelligent vocabulary out there for discussing thc craft of building characters. Reviews of an actor’s performance which appear in the newspapers are generally based on whethcr the reviewer likes the actors or not. It’s not about whether they are being skilful or not, or how intelligent their choices are."
There remains something mysterious about slipping into "other people’s shocs’: "It’s something like falling in love," Harriet says. "When you’re in love with someone, you go in and out of separateness and togetherness. It’s similar with acting and you can slip in and out of a character. Once a character has been built, it remains with you, at the end of a phone line, as it were, waiting for your call."
Harriet includes her early work in Other People’s Shoes— "I wanted to separate myself from those who say, ’What an idiot I was, what a load of nonsense we all talked in those days!’; it wasn’t all rubbish, and it has affected how I approach my work and my audienccs.’ And she retains from those days her belief in the vital role of the theatre.
Harriet criticises theatre reviewers because they
选项
A、do not give enough recognition to the art of character acting.
B、de not realise that some parts are more difficult to act than others.
C、choose the wrong kinds of plays to review.
D、suggest that certain actors have an easy job.
答案
A
解析
本题属于推理型问题:“Harriet批评戏剧评论家的理由是什么?”根据文章第五段,Harriet认为戏剧评论家对演员表演的评论一般是基于对演员的喜欢与否,而不是基于他们表演得是否有技巧。因此,可推断答案为D,“评论家们没有对人物表演艺术给予足够的重视”。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/UI8sFFFM
本试题收录于:
BETS三级笔试题库北京英语水平考试(BETS)分类
0
BETS三级笔试
北京英语水平考试(BETS)
相关试题推荐
例如:男:把这个材料复印5份,一会儿拿到会议室发给大家。女:好的。会议是下午三点吗?男:改了。三点半,推迟了半个小时。女:好,602会议室没变吧?男:对,没变。问:会议几点开始?A两点B3点C15:30√D18:00
例如:男:把这个材料复印5份,一会儿拿到会议室发给大家。女:好的。会议是下午三点吗?男:改了。三点半,推迟了半个小时。女:好,602会议室没变吧?男:对,没变。问:会议几点开始?A两点B3点C15:30√D18:00
HereisanadvertisementaboutaBusinessBookClub.Readtheadvertisementandcompletethegiveninformationform.Wri
Readthefollowingpassages,eightsentenceshavebeenremovedfromthearticle.ChoosefromthesentencesA-Htheonewhich
Somepeoplebelievethatinternationalsportcreatesgoodwillbetweenthenationsandthatifcountriesplaygamestogetherthey
Theinfluenceofclimateonbehaviorappearsall-pervasive.Indeed,whocanclaimthatweatherfactorshavenoinfluenceonthei
1.AmericancomedianKinHubbardwouldsay,"Don’tknocktheweather.Ifitdidn’tchange,nineoutoftenpeoplewouldn’tbeab
Whenwespeakofabasichumanneed,wemeansomethingwhichisnecessarytolife,somethingthatwecannotpossiblydowithout.
Asregardssocialconventions,wemustsayawordaboutthewell-knownEnglishclasssystem.Thisisanembarrassingsubjectfor
随机试题
患者男,40岁。多年来全口牙龈反复肿胀,曾作过多次治疗,近5~6天再次加重。检查全口牙龈肿,充血,触之出血,下颌磨牙牙周袋超过5mm,压溢脓,X线检查,全口多数牙槽骨有不同程度吸收,无龋。全身乏力,饮食量比一般人大,尿量也多。需采取的治疗是
AA常合并肝功能损害,应酌情选用静脉滴注ATG不宜过快,每日剂量应维持点滴的时间是
肾蒂中没有的结构是
与DIC患者早期出血关系最为密切的因素是()
为加强药品监督管理、规范药品流通秩序、保证药品质量制定的行政规章是()。
没有围护结构的直径2.2m,高2.4m的屋顶圆形水箱,其建筑面积()
钢筋混凝土柱下独立基础属于:
建筑市场主体的诚信评价,包括政府对市场主体的诚信评价和社会中介信用机构的信用评价,前者是()。
( )科目编码必须按财政部的统一编码方案进行编制。
Onereasonhumanbeingscanthriveinallkindsofclimatesisthattheycancontrolthequalitiesoftheairintheenclosedsp
最新回复
(
0
)